nogginthenog
TF
Hello. This is my first post, so thank you for letting me be here. I'm hoping someone with more experience than I have can help with the following query.
I have a quantity of Victorian red quarry tiles that came out of a kitchen in a terraced house in York. 6 inch by 6 inch by one inch.
If I lay these on concrete outside, is there any way they won't be spalled to hell after a winter or two freezing and thawing? I know some quarry tiles are frostproof, but I've also seen them laid outdoors and reduced to a latticework of raised cement mortar by the weather.
I'd like to use them if I can, but don't want to be looking at a scene of devastation in a couple of years time.
Does anyone have any experience of using reclaimed quarry tiles outdoors? Are there any steps I can take to preserve them, by the way I lay them? Or am I needlessly concerned?
Cheers
Richard
I have a quantity of Victorian red quarry tiles that came out of a kitchen in a terraced house in York. 6 inch by 6 inch by one inch.
If I lay these on concrete outside, is there any way they won't be spalled to hell after a winter or two freezing and thawing? I know some quarry tiles are frostproof, but I've also seen them laid outdoors and reduced to a latticework of raised cement mortar by the weather.
I'd like to use them if I can, but don't want to be looking at a scene of devastation in a couple of years time.
Does anyone have any experience of using reclaimed quarry tiles outdoors? Are there any steps I can take to preserve them, by the way I lay them? Or am I needlessly concerned?
Cheers
Richard